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What Is Term Life Insurance and Where It Fits in a Canadian Coverage Plan

If you have people who depend on your income, a mortgage that depends on your ability to pay it, or children whose future depends on your presence, Term life insurance is the most important financial product you’ll ever buy.

Let’s start with the honest version of the conversation nobody had with you before you had kids, signed a mortgage, or built a life that other people depend on.

If you died tomorrow, your family would face a financial crisis and not just an emotional one. The mortgage payment would still arrive on the first of the month. Childcare would not stop costing money. Groceries, utilities, debt repayments, none of it pauses for grief.

Term life insurance in Canada is the financial tool designed to handle exactly that scenario. And for most young Canadians, it is the single most important coverage decision you will ever make.

What Is Term Life Insurance, really?

Term life insurance is a policy that pays a tax-free, lump-sum benefit to your named beneficiaries e.g. your partner, your children, or your estate if you die while the policy is active.

You choose three things when you apply:

The coverage amount – the death benefit your family receives (e.g., $500,000, $1,000,000). This is paid out completely tax-free.

The term length – how long the policy covers you (typically 10, 20, or 30 years). Premiums are fixed for this entire period.

Your beneficiaries – who receives the money. You can name multiple people and specify what percentage each receives.

Term life policies can also be structured as joint policies covering two lives under a single contract. This is typically offered as first-to-die (the benefit pays when the first partner dies) or last-to-die (the benefit pays when the surviving partner dies). Joint policies are worth considering for couples who want simplified coverage under one contract, though it is generally recommended to compare the total cost of two individual policies before choosing a joint structure, as individual policies offer more flexibility when life circumstances change.

In return, you pay a fixed monthly or annual premium for the duration of that term. If you die within the chosen term, your beneficiaries receive the full coverage amount. If you outlive the term of your term life policy, which, statistically, most people do, the policy simply expires with no payout and no cash value.

That last part is where people sometimes balk. “What! You mean I could pay premiums for 20 years and get nothing?” Yes! But you didn’t get nothing. Your family was protected for 20 years. If you had passed during that time, your family would have maintained the life you were giving them before you died. The fact that you didn’t die is the good news, not the bad news.

How Term Life Insurance Works in Canada: Step by Step

The mechanics are refreshingly simple compared to most financial products.

You apply

You provide personal details: age, sex at birth, health history, smoking status, and the coverage amount you want. Many insurers now offer instant online approval for healthy applicants under 50.

You’re underwritten

The insurer assesses your risk profile. For most healthy applicants in their 20s and 30s, this is straightforward and quick. For larger coverage amounts, typically over $1 million, a medical exam may be required.

Your occupation also factors into underwriting. Canadians in high-risk professions such as commercial pilots, offshore oil workers, firefighters, and underground miners, may face higher premiums or additional exclusions due to the elevated mortality risk associated with their work. This does not mean coverage is unavailable. It means the insurer prices the policy to reflect the actual risk. If your occupation is considered high-risk, disclose it honestly and work with an independent broker who can identify which insurers are most competitive for your specific profession.

Attempting to misrepresent your occupation on an application is treated the same as any other material misrepresentation and that can result in a denied claim.

Your policy is issued

Your premium is locked in for the duration of your chosen term. It will not increase during that period regardless of changes to your health. This is one of the most valuable features of term insurance.

You’re covered

If you die during the term, your beneficiaries file a claim, provide a death certificate, and receive the full benefit amount, typically within 30 days. The payment is completely tax-free and can be used for anything. Premium payments also stop once a claim is filed.

Your term ends – you are still alive

You can renew the policy at a higher premium, convert it to a permanent policy using your conversion privilege, or let it lapse if you no longer need the coverage. Most Canadian term policies include a conversion privilege, which is the right to convert without a new medical exam up to a certain age. Be sure to ask your broker about this.

⏱ The free look period – use it deliberately
Most Canadian insurers offer term life insurance policies with a review period of 10 to 30 days after your policy is issued. During this window, you can cancel for any reason and receive a full refund of all premiums paid. Do not let this window pass without doing four things:

  1. Read the exclusions section carefully and confirm nothing surprises you
  2. Verify that the conversion privilege is included and note the conversion deadline age
  3. Confirm your beneficiary designations are recorded exactly as intended
  4. Check that the coverage amount and term length on the policy document match what you applied for. Errors on issued policies are rare but they do happen

What Term Life Insurance Does Not Cover

Term life insurance pays the death benefit in the vast majority of claims. But there are specific circumstances where a claim can be denied. Understanding these upfront is not pessimism, it is the foundation of your beneficiaries’ financial security.

Common exclusions to know

Most Canadian term life policies exclude the following circumstances. These exclusions vary by insurer and are listed in full in your policy document.

The two-year contestability period. Every term life insurance policy issued in Canada includes a contestability period, typically the first two years the policy is active. During this window, if you die, your insurer has the right to investigate the claim in full. If they find that material information was misrepresented or omitted on your application, a health condition you did not disclose, a medication you failed to mention, smoking status you understated, they can deny the claim and return only the premiums paid. After the two-year contestability period closes, the policy becomes incontestable on the grounds of misrepresentation. This is why complete honesty during the application process is not just ethical. It is what your family’s financial security is built on. Do not treat it lightly.

The practical rule: Disclose everything honestly during underwriting, read the exclusions section during your free look period, and keep a copy of your original application alongside your policy documents so your executor has full context if a claim is ever required.

What Does Term Life Insurance Cost in Canada?

This is the question that keeps people from acting and the answer almost always surprises them. PolicyMe reports the average cost of term life insurance starts at around $20–$30 a month for a healthy Canadian in their 30s. For a coverage amount that could pay off your mortgage, fund your children’s education, and replace years of income, that is less than most Canadians spend on a streaming subscription. Let that sink in.

According to the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association, 23 million Canadians carried life insurance in 2024, with average household coverage sitting at $509,000 which is up 5.4% from the year prior. Term life policies now account for 66% of all individual life insurance in force in Canada, up from just 59% a decade ago, reflecting a clear shift toward the more affordable and flexible option. The pattern is consistent: as Canadians face larger mortgages, rising childcare costs, and longer financial commitments, the appetite for straightforward term coverage grows with it.

25~$18–$22~$22–$28
30~$20–$26~$26–$34
35~$26–$34~$34–$44
40~$38–$50~$50–$68
45~$60–$80~$80–$105
50~$95–$130~$130–$175

Rates are estimates based on 2025 market data from major Canadian insurers including Sun LifeCanadian LIC, and Ratehub. Actual premiums vary based on health history, smoking status, coverage amount, term length, and specific insurer.

What term life renewal actually costs – the number most people never consider

When your term ends and you renew without a new medical exam, the insurer re-rates your premium based on your age at renewal. The policy continues — but the premium resets to reflect the actuarial risk of your current age profile. Here is what a 20-year term policy looks like at renewal for someone who bought coverage at 35 and renews at 55:

Female non-smoker~$30/month~$250–$340/month8–11× increase
Male non-smoker~$40/month~$340–$450/month8–11× increase

Renewal is designed as a short-term bridge, typically one to three years while you reassess your needs, not as a long-term coverage strategy. If you anticipate needing coverage beyond your original term, the conversion privilege is almost always a better path than renewal. If your health has changed in ways that would affect underwriting, conversion may be the only viable path.

Term Life vs. Permanent Insurance: The Honest Side-by-Side

So, if my coverage will end at some point, and renewal will be so expensive, why not just buy a permanent policy? This question comes up constantly, so let us address it directly. Permanent insurance is not a single product. It is a family of four distinct products (T-100, whole life, participating whole life, and universal life), each suited to different situations. This comparison covers the category as a whole. The detailed product-by-product breakdown is in this article here.

Coverage periodFixed term (10, 20, 30 years)Lifetime – never expires
Monthly cost (30-yr-old, $500K coverage)~$20–$30/month~$120–$400+/month depending on product type
Cash value componentNoVaries – T-100 has none; whole life and universal life build cash value over time
PremiumsFixed for the termFixed for life, fixed for a fix term, fixed up to a certain age or variable depending on the product.
Best forTemporary obligations: mortgage, young children, active debts, income replacementPermanent obligations: estate tax liability, business succession, lifelong dependents, wealth transfer
FlexibilityCan convert to permanent; can layer multiple policiesVaries by product type – T-100 is simple; universal life is highly configurable

The four permanent products explained: T-100, whole life, participating whole life, and universal life each serve a different purpose at a different cost. The full comparison is in Term vs. Whole Life Insurance: The Honest Breakdown 

The math case for term: The $120–$370/month you save by choosing term over permanent coverage can be invested separately. For most Canadians, this produces better long-term outcomes than the cash value component inside a permanent policy. Most independent financial planners refer to this as “buy term and invest the difference” it is the starting framework for anyone comparing the two options for the first time. Be sure to always consider what you are protecting when making the term vs permanent life insurance decision. A permanent policy may be better suited for some of your needs.

Three things this rate table makes clear: women pay less (10–20% lower due to longer life expectancy); waiting is expensive (rates climb by ~8% per year); and smoking changes everything – a smoker in their 30s pays two to three times the non-smoker rate. Quit for 12 months and you may qualify for non-smoker rates from your provider.

Choosing Your Term Length

Your term should last long enough to cover the period during which your family would be financially devastated by your death. As your debts shrink, your savings grow, and your children become self-sufficient, your need for large coverage naturally decreases. Here’s a practical guide by situation:

10 yr

Short-term protection

Kids nearly grown, mortgage nearly paid

Covers final years of financial vulnerability. Lower cost, shorter commitment.

20 yr

Most popular choice

Young family, active mortgage, young children

Bridges the gap between your most exposed years and the point where savings and paid-down debt reduce your risk. The right choice for most young Canadian families.

25 yr

Extended family protection

New parent, large mortgage, single income

Covers through your children’s full education years and into early financial independence.

30 yr

Maximum coverage window

Young, newborn children, long mortgage

Locking in the lowest rates now for the longest window. Best when you’re young and want to avoid the risk of rising premiums later.

Multiple policies vs. policy layering

Some Canadian families buy two or more separate term policies to protect different things at the same time. For example, one policy covering the mortgage and another covering income replacement. That is a valid approach, but there is another option.

Policy layering is a product structure offered by select Canadian insurers, including Cooperators. It involves a single policy (typically a permanent policy) as the foundation, with one or more term riders attached on top. Each term rider covers a specific temporary need for a defined period: a 10-year rider might cover a business loan while a 20-year rider covers income replacement during the years your children are dependent. As each temporary need resolves, the corresponding term rider lapses. The permanent base policy remains in force for as long as it is needed, covering obligations that have no expiry date. If you choose to use a term policy as the base policy, the add-on policies cannot be longer than the term of the primary policy.

The practical advantage is that your coverage shrinks in line with your actual needs over time, without requiring new underwriting or new contracts at each stage. Everything is built into a single policy structure from the start.

This approach is particularly relevant for Canadians who have both temporary and permanent needs. The family with a mortgage and young children today, but also a rental property or incorporated business that will create an estate tax obligation regardless of when they die.

Layering is worth discussing with an independent advisor if your situation involves both types of need. It is not the right structure for everyone, but for the right situation it can be meaningfully more efficient than managing several standalone policies.

5 Mistakes to Avoid When Buying Term Life Insurance in Canada

Waiting until you “need” it

Waiting until you have kids or buy a home to think about coverage is like waiting until your car is sliding on ice to consider winter tires. Your health can change overnight. The best time to buy was before you needed it. The second best time is now.

Only relying on group coverage at work

Group life insurance typically covers only 1–2 times your annual salary and typically disappears the moment you change jobs. It is a supplement to personal coverage, not a replacement for it.

Underinsuring to save on premiums

Buying $250,000 of coverage because it’s cheaper than $750,000 is a false economy. If $250,000 would leave your family unable to cover the mortgage and raise your children, the policy hasn’t done its job. Term insurance is affordable enough that there’s rarely a good reason to underinsure.

Forgetting to name or update your beneficiary

Your policy pays to whoever is listed. If that’s an ex-spouse, an estranged family member, or your estate (which triggers probate), your family may not get what you intended. Review your beneficiary designations after every major life event.

Not disclosing health information honestly

If you misrepresent your health history on your application and die during the term, your insurer has grounds to deny the claim. Always be fully transparent during the underwriting process; your beneficiaries’ financial security depends on it.

Newcomers to Canada: can you get term life insurance?

Yes, in most cases but with conditions that vary by insurer. Most Canadian insurers require that you are a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or have been a legal resident of Canada for a minimum period, typically 12 months. Some insurers will consider applications from individuals on work permits or study permits, particularly for longer-duration permits, though coverage options may be more limited and a medical exam is more likely to be required.

If you are new to Canada and applying for term life insurance, be prepared to provide documentation of your residency status and disclose your immigration status honestly during the application. Working with an independent broker is particularly valuable for newcomers, as a broker can identify which insurers are most accommodating to your specific situation rather than requiring you to apply to each insurer individually.

You do not need to be a Canadian citizen. You do need to be a resident. The specific residency requirements are listed in each insurer’s eligibility section.

Major Term Life Insurance Providers in Canada

Canada has a well-regulated, competitive life insurance market. The premium you pay matters less than the coverage amount, the policy terms, and the insurer’s claims-paying reputation. Here are the main players:

Canada’s largest life insurer. Strong product range and national reach.

Competitive online tools and instant approval for many applicants.

Part of Great-West Lifeco. Strong across all provinces.

Convenient for existing RBC banking clients. Competitive rates.

Digital-first platform with fast online approval and competitive pricing.

Independent broker model. Compares across multiple insurers for you.

Our recommendation: Use a comparison platform like Ratehub or PolicyMe to understand the range of rates, then work with an independent broker to finalize your purchase especially if your health history is anything other than straightforward. A broker can advocate for better rates across multiple insurers. The CLHIA and FCAC also publish excellent unbiased consumer guides.

Ready to find out your number?

Download our free New Family Insurance Checklist and use our DIME coverage calculator to figure out exactly how much term life insurance your family needs.

The Canadian Family Insurance Checklist

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